SEC LINDA McMAHON, PAYTON McNABB: Common sense says women's sports are for women only
Print Close
By Linda McMahon, , Payton McNabb
Published June 23, 2025
It's becoming increasingly difficult to find a political issue that unites Americans. But there's at least one that generates common ground: protecting women's sports. Overwhelmingly, polls indicate that a majority of Americans, from both ends of the political spectrum, don't believe allowing stronger, faster men in women's competitions and intimate spaces is fair to women and girls.
On Monday, June 23, as we celebrate the 53rd anniversary of Title IX, we join Americans across the country in continuing the fight to secure the sex-based protections we uniquely need as women: the right to compete in equal, sex-segregated athletic programs, to access female-only intimate spaces, and to be shielded from sexual harassment.
Before its passage in 1972, the opportunity to compete – or to be recognized in athletics – was rare for women and girls. Fewer than 32,000 women played collegiate sports, and less than 300,000 girls played high school sports. On top of that, women did not have equal access to scholarships or academic programs.
RILEY GAINES: TITLE IX WAS MEANT TO PROTECT WOMEN, NOT ERASE US
Even after the initial passage, progress was slow. The most recognized sports association today – the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) – did not begin recognizing women's volleyball as a championship sport until 1981, over a decade after the first men's championship. The NCAA also recognized the women's softball championship that same year, whereas the first men's baseball championship took place in 1947.
Over 3 million girls in America play high school sports today, and over 222,000 play collegiate sports. But this was not always the case. Powerhouse athletes like basketball star Caitlin Clark and Olympic gymnast Simone Biles, who have made a career off of their athletic prowess, were able to ascend to professional sports because of the groundwork laid by Title IX.
While common sense has won in the court of public opinion, ideological insanity continues to prevail in athletic competitions across the country. For example, just a few weeks ago, a male once again made headlines for stealing first place in a girls' track meet in California.
DEPT OF EDUCATION LABELS JUNE AS 'TITLE IX MONTH' IN WAKE OF TRANS ATHLETES WINNING GIRLS' COMPETITIONS
The good news is that we no longer have a president in the White House who will bend the knee and allow these egregious situations to continue without consequences. Under President Donald Trump's leadership, the U.S. Department of Education has taken a firm stance in favor of common sense. From the start, this administration has sought to safeguard women under federal education civil rights law by quickly ending the Biden-era unlawful interpretation of Title IX and, once again, championing equal opportunity protections on the basis of biological sex. President Trump reiterated those protections by issuing an executive order to ban men from women's sports, and the Department has enforced that directive with vigor.
The Department has also made it clear that states are not permitted to discriminate against girls in sports by allowing men to compete, steal titles and victories, and place female athletes in physical danger. Take Payton McNabb, for example, who suffered substantial injuries to her head and neck from the high velocity of a volleyball spiked, not by a fellow female competitor, but by a much-stronger male.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION
This is unacceptable.
In response to these clear dangers for female athletes, who are protected by federal law, the Trump administration has launched investigations into California, Maine, and other states for alleged violations. Together with the U.S. Department of Justice, the Department is expediting investigations into schools and universities for short-changing female athletes and violating Title IX. From the California Interscholastic Foundation to the Minnesota State High School League to the University of Maryland, these agencies are working together to preserve Title IX and ensure women are not subjected to unfair competition with men. States that do not follow the law are at risk of losing federal funding if they insist on continuing to trample women's civil rights.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
This Title IX anniversary will not be marred by an interpretation that disrespects the rights of women and girls in favor of the feelings of male athletes. Rather, we will be celebrating the athletic accomplishments of women across the country.
As a woman who played unorganized sports before Title IX and a woman who endured the Biden administration's abuses of Title IX, we both know the importance of having a law in place that empowers women. We are on the side of the vast majority of Americans who agree that what women in sports have had to endure for the past several years is absurd and unfair. Women deserve access to fair and safe competition, and under the Trump administration, their voices are finally being heard.
Payton McNabb is a sports ambassador for Independent Women and former three-sport high school athlete who turned tragedy into triumph after a traumatic brain injury ended her athletic future. Print Close
URL
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/sec-linda-mcmahon-payton-mcnabb-common-sense-says-womens-sports-women-only
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
7 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Iran Strike Overreach of Trump Authority: Rep. Balint
Rep. Becca Balint (D) Vermont shares her thoughts on whether or not members of Congress should still push through with a vote on a war powers resolution even if President Trump states he no longer intends any additional military attack against Iran. She also talks about if she believes the conflict between the US and Iran is over or not. Representative Balint speaks with Kailey Leinz and Joe Mathieu on the late edition of Bloomberg's 'Balance of Power.' (Source: Bloomberg)


CBS News
13 minutes ago
- CBS News
First woman to head coach a boys' team at White Bear Lake is turning the soccer program around
She's breaking barriers as the first female head coach of a boys' team at White Bear Lake schools. Taelynn Gittins took the helm of the boys' varsity soccer team last season, and has helped turn the program around. Before Gittins took over as head coach, the varsity team only had one win in 2023. In 2024, her first season as head coach, they improved to seven wins. "The program needed a change and she's done a great job so far," said Noah Watson, junior captain on the White Bear Lake boys' soccer team. A big change she's made with the team is starting their training a lot earlier than normal. Even though the season begins in the fall, the boys are practicing every week this summer. "Why not get them more training, more touches on the ball?" Gittins said. "So when it comes time for fall, we're not getting the rust off then, we're doing it in the summer." Head coach Taelynn Gittins became the head coach for the White Bear Lake boys' soccer team last year. WCCO "Honestly, just the tempo at practices and the effort she's putting in is a lot more surreal, and just the intensity she's putting in is just 10 times better," said Gavin Huot, senior captain on the White Bear Lake boys' soccer team. Gittins' soccer career began in the goal, and she took her skills to Division III at St. Scholastica College. After she graduated, she started at with the Bears boys' soccer team as a goalie coach and worked her way up to where she is now. "Our previous head coach really brought me in and made it normal that we're not looking at gender at all, we're looking at skills base," Gittins said. Breaking the norm in sports means facing age-old standards. "People have just expected that I'm a manager and not a coach," said Gittins, but she doesn't let those standards stop her. "I kind of let the comments role off my back. My big thing is I kind of use it as motivation to just prove them wrong," "She's just another coach. I don't see any different," said Cooper Feirn, senior goalie on the White Bear Lake boys' soccer team. The improving stats speaking for themselves, but deeper than that, Gittins has brought a more personal connection to this team that has helped all the players improve their game. "What I like is she talks to us one on one. She can really help you face to face," Feirn said. "I think she's a lot more personal, and it's easier to be comfortable around and play with confidence when you have a coach you can relate with and talk to," Watson said. Gittins has helped these players dream bigger as they head towards the start of their new season. "We're going to state...I know it," Feirn said. Also new this season — Gittins brought more women onto her staff, including hiring a woman to coach the boys' junior varsity team.


CBS News
13 minutes ago
- CBS News
Protestors in Denver oppose war with Iran: "Do not define the Islamic regime as the Iranian people"
As tensions rise over President Trump's decision to launch airstrikes against Iran, a last-minute protest Sunday at the Colorado State Capitol drew people voicing opposition to the prospect of another U.S. war in the Middle East. The demonstration, organized by the Party for Socialism and Liberation, came together in less than 24 hours. A few dozen protesters gathered peacefully in the afternoon to condemn the military action and call for peace. "There was no way that we weren't gonna be out here protesting," said Katie Leonard, a member of the Party for Socialism and Liberation. Just blocks away, Aryan Kiani, who came to the United States as a student in 1978, offered a different perspective. Kiani, an Iranian-born Denver resident who advocates for a secular Iran, criticized both the U.S. strike and the Islamic regime in his home country. "The violence is gonna cause the violence in the future, and it's not gonna help the United States," Kiani said. "Do not define the Islamic regime as the Iranian people. They are not." Mr. Trump said that he launched strikes against the Iranian nuclear sites in Fordo, Natanz, and Isfahan on Saturday and called the strikes a "spectacular military success." In addition to retaliatory strikes against Israel, which launched strikes against Iran on June 12, Iran launched missiles at the U.S. Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar on Monday. Later that day, Mr. Trump said that Israel and Iran have agreed on a "Complete and Total" ceasefire. Despite differing views, protesters and Kiani shared opposition to further U.S. military involvement in the region. Protesters drew parallels to the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. "We've lived through this already," Leonard said. "Back when George W. Bush said that Iraq had so-called 'weapons of mass destruction' and used that as a pretext to send us to war." Kiani said he hopes international intervention won't be necessary and that change in Iran can come from within. "Let the people do the job," he said. "You don't need the military." The protest ended peacefully around 5:30 p.m., with organizers saying more demonstrations are likely in the future.